As Tee made a name on the football field and basketball court, Stewart became "Lady Stewart," to family and friends in the community of Oak Valley Baptist Church.
When she couldn't get the hang of waitressing at a Shoney's, she turned to home health care and worked in the Alzheimer's unit to stay in the apartment. She moved on from the bubble Chevy to a Durango to a Tahoe. When the white Benz got flipped over three times last year, he got her another one.
"It's that new gray-looking color," she says.
What she knows for sure is what happened last week is "life changing." But not transformational.
"I'm the same person. No better than anybody. Just blessed," Stewart says.
It is choir rehearsal night at Oak Valley Baptist and it's not the only day she's there. She's there every Wednesday night for Bible study, where she helps teach the upper elementary class. She also drives the van to pick up the kids and drop them off.
She's still working, too, but it's hard to consider it a job because it's fun working for KeKe, an LPN who now runs her own home health care company.
"Her daughter may follow in her footsteps,' Stewart says of a granddaughter about to graduate from high school. "She wants to go into either forensics or nursing."
Stewart says she'll retire one day. Right now, she's thinking about her son and the Super Bowl.
"He's going to go back and they're going to win it," she says. "It's their time."
Her mama's boy was damn near the MVP the last time they got there. Even if Tee Higgins wins it in the next one, he'll have a hard time topping his mom's own 50-50 story she grabbed for dear life and hauled it back in from out in the world.
"We're close. We're really close, and I know how he feels about me," says Camilla Stewart, who heard the mama's boy tell her again, only this time in front of the whole world. "It bought tears to my eyes. I wasn't expecting that."